Help Yourself When Enrolled At The School of Hard Knocks

Asking 5 Big Questions Can Raise the Value of Experience

“Hard Knocks” sounds like a painful way to learn something. It can be. It doesn’t have to be. Experiential learning is the best way to learn something. Not only does it communicate the information, but experience illustrates its worth.

Knowledge is a possession. With any possession, it’s best to appreciate its worth.

Confucius said it like this: “By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is bitterest.”

A teacher can tell, a teacher can show. Telling is abstract. You’re listing the reasons and expecting your audience to make the connection with what they’re doing.

On the other hand, showing is vivid. Not only are you relating the information, but you’re connecting why it’s important.

Teachers are often limited in their ability to demonstrate their lessons. Where the “faculty” (experiences) at the School of Hard Knocks excels is in their ability to show and demonstrate.

Understanding the lesson, sometimes surviving the lessons are a challenge.

That’s another way of saying the tuition can be costly.

The School of Hard Knocks Can Teach More Than You Want to Know

Being good at learning from experiences isn’t a guarantee that bad things will never happen to you. What it is, however, is a way of getting the most you can from what happens to you.

A graduate student in his twenties was standing on the side of a dirt embankment. He was on a hike with friends, enjoying some beautiful spring weather in a state park in Texas.

Suddenly, the loosely packed earth underneath his feet gave away. The man found himself plummeting 25 or 30 feet down the side of a gully into a ravine.

While he was tumbling down the hill, he instinctively stuck his arms out to break his fall.

The young man’s instincts were right. His arms saved his unprotected skull and head—nobodyhikes with a helmet.

Unfortunately, with the fall, many of the small and large bones in his arms and hands shattered and broke.

Medics took him to the nearest emergency department, almost 100 miles away. X-rays showed the doctor, the young man, and his friend precisely what and where the bones of his arm were broken.

A few years before, the man had had an anatomy class. Unfortunately, a lot of the information he had learned was rusty and underused.

Between the pain medication, the anxiety, and the stale knowledge base, the young man struggled to understand what the doctor was telling him.

His plans for the next few months were going to be undergoing significant changes. In the emergency department, he was still coming to terms with the changes.

Part of it was if his class was like so many anatomy classes someone might take at a university. A professor had stood at the front of a classroom and lectured about the names of the bones and how they were connected.

Most of the students listen as they’re half asleep. He was undoubtedly one of them, coping with the mornings with a tall cup of coffee or an energy drink. The professor’s lesson on the bones of the arms and skeleton lacks the immediacy of the young man learning what kind of rehabilitation he was going to face.

In the former situation in the classroom, there’s no stress, but it’s abstract, and many people will find it boring. They need a bunch of caffeine to make it through. In the latter situation, there’s the shock your next few months aren’t going to be what you thought.

We wouldn’t want a society where professors of anatomy went around breaking student’s arms to demonstrate the importance of knowing the names and articulations of the bones in the arms. We don’t need to fall off of a cliff to understand the kinematics of the injury to bones. That would be crazy.

When we’re talking about personal development, when we’re talking about people helping themselves, what we want is for people to learn well from every avenue available — lecture, reading and, of course, experience.

We want to learn more from our experiences, even the ones that aren’t so life and plan changing as a fall down a tall cliff. We want to lower the cost and increase the value of what’s learned.

Today, the young man who fell off of the cliff can tell someone who has broken their arms all about the recovery process from healing from multiple fractures. He knows the feelings in detail.

Yet the cost of the knowledge, one can argue, was too high, especially when he wasn’t going to be working in a position where he’d regularly encounter people with multiple broken bones.

He could have learned much of the same thing without falling from a mountain.

Being curious is key.

Tuition at The School of Hard Knocks Can Be Expensive

To fully understand what had happened to him and what the future held, the young man has to know what bones he broke, how those bones are supposed to interact with his other bones and the type of fractures he had.

Additionally, he needs to know how long it takes bones to heal, what kind of surgeries he’s going to need, what kind of rehabilitation he’s going to face, and how to cope with the pain.

There’s going to be a lot of pain.

He’s also going to have to know how to use his arms again. If his friends hadn’t helped at the scene, and if the park medics hadn’t known what they were doing, he could have ended up with artificial limbs. They made sure the blood was circulating and that he was able to keep his arms.

The fall into the ravine had demonstrated the importance of this knowledge like nothing else.

While a college anatomy class wouldn’t have taught him everything about the course of his recovery, it would have gotten his understanding a good way down the road.

The tuition in his case was rather expensive: several months of rehabilitation, pain, inability to work, and delay in completing the coursework for his degree.

Sometimes the School of Hard Knocks is like that.

Yet experiences can be both minor and major.

You can learn a lot from both.

Sometimes the minor experience can provide a major lesson.

For example, you’re hungry. You decide to eat a heaping plate of leftover spaghetti and immediately head off to bed.

A half-hour later, you wake up gagging and coughing. The spaghetti has come upon you, and you’re choking. Spaghetti is dense food. It takes a while to digest. Not only that, but your stomach is going to be churning while you’re trying to digest the food. You’re laid out flat. The food can easily push past the sphincter that holds food in your stomach.

There’s a couple of things you could have done differently. You could have eaten something easier to digest. You could have waited a bit longer before lying flat. Either action could have helped.

Once you recover, if you adjust when you eat or when you lay down, you emerge no worse for it.

If the experience doesn’t kill you, if you don’t suffer any significant losses, if you retain the lesson no worse for the wear, and you move on without too much mental or emotional trauma, then the lesson is a bargain. You have a vivid illustration of why it was important.

Merely changing a thing or two about when you eat a heavy meal can save you from getting on medication for acid reflux that could lead to you getting surgery eventually.

Regularly reflecting on your lessons at the school can prove to be a bargain.

Organize Your Lessons at the School of Hard Knocks

The whole problem with learning at the School of Hard Knocks, or learning by experience, is the lessons aren’t organized.

On the other hand, if something went right, it will only go right by accident again.

You very well might eat that plate of spaghetti again the next night, messing up your sleep one more time.

Philosopher George Santayana said it succinctly: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

Santayana was speaking of big events: wars, facism, things like that.

His insight can and should be applied to minor events, like a guy overeating spaghetti and heading off to bed.

A good teacher, coach, guru, whatever, will take you step-by-step through the material. He or she will summarize the material. Later he or she will check your memory. At the end of the course, there will be a final exam.

To learn the most you can from your experiences, you’ve got to do the work of a teacher (or be a coach) for or to yourself.

Recruiting Better Faculty at the School of Hard Knocks

In the military, education is called “training.”

Yet there’s a subtle difference between education and the military idea of training.

Education takes place in the classroom. The subjects are more abstract. For example, you might learn the theory of how a rifle works and why it’s essential to keep it clean.

Later, you’re going into the field. You’re going to get to fire the rifle. You’ll experience how your ability to control your breathing affects the aim of the projectile. You’re going to learn how to clean your rifle and what it takes to get your weapon in shape to pass the critical eye of the armorer.

You’re going to have training missions.

The way military leaders make it into education is to sit the soldiers down who have just training and have a discussion session called an after-action review. It’s so common in the military that it’s commonly known only by its initials: AAR. Of course, the military is big on acronyms for everything.

Thisis what’s missing from the way most people learn from experience. It’s a step that’s important enough that you should take it when you’re trying to help yourself get better at anything.

The personal AAR can lower the cost of tuition or increase the value of the education received at the School of Hard Knocks like nothing else.

It comes down to asking five questions about any project or test you do when you’re trying your situation or yourself.

What did I think was going to happen? (Past)

What really did happen? (Present)

What went right? (Positives)

What went wrong? (Negatives)

What should I do next time? (Future)

The guy who’s trying to learn to sleep better might do the same thing after he wakes up in the morning.

He’d review his sleep session.

He’d ask himself the five big questions:

1. What did I think was going to happen?

I thought I’d go to bed and wake up in the morning. Maybe I’d get up in the middle of the night to use the bathroom once. If I did, it would be no big deal. That’s what I do when I eat right before bed.

2. What really did happen?

About a half-hour later, I ended up choking and gagging. I had to spit up the noodles and meatballs from the spaghetti. Then it made my throat sore. I couldn’t get back to sleep right away.

3. What went right?

I didn’t choke or suffocate. I was able to breathe, though it was hard for a bit.

4. What went wrong?

I couldn’t digest the food right away.

5. What, if anything, should I do differently next time?

When I go to bed next time, I should either wait a bit before laying down or eat less. I could also eat something besides spaghetti that’s easier to digest.

The Best Students at The School of Hard Knocks

People who talk a lot, who have an opinion about everything (the more outrageous, the better), and are great at making everyone pay attention to them seem to have an advantage most of the time these days.

These people find themselves on TV on reality shows, the nightly news, and in government. They amass large followings on Instagram. They make videos for YouTube that get tens of thousands of views. They’re invited to give talks at seminars, conventions, and TED talks. They tell stories with emotion that convey easy-to-understand points.

They’re great at running their mouths off. They rarely say, “I don’t know.” They have all of the answers and deliver them confidently, just like someone might jerk their knee reflexively.

People can understand what they’re saying, too, because it’s not hard to. Listeners don’t have to work very hard to understand, either. When it comes to the talkers and the listeners, there’s nothing profound or deep going on between anyone’s ears.

The opposite of these shallow “look-at-me” types have the advantage at the School of Hard Knocks. They’re the type to think about their experiences. The five-part AAR process mightbe something that occurred to them naturally. Either that or they adapted it from a leadership class. That’s all it is, really, self-leadership.

While there is a clear advantage to being like the former individual, being a contemplative person helps you learn lessons from your life, your experiences, what you read, and from talking to other people.

Some of them, undoubtedly, have learned to act as the former individual, because it’s so profitable in today’s society and yet, on the inside, be contemplative and learn from their experiences.

Learn from Others’ Experiences

Simply put, review what you can from failures and successes others have had. You can use the AAR format as a way to show interest in what they’re telling you. Generally speaking, people are often willing to teach and know if you only show interest in them as a person.

When you’re reading, use the bookmark tool on your browser or a service like Pocket to bookmark articles across your devices to refer to later. A good practice is to review these articles one day a week to retain this good information and to keep it at the top of your mind.

Review and organizing are as much of a key to learning and success as something like keeping your eye on the big picture.

Learn by Keeping a Dream Journal

Finally, writing your dreams down can help you understand what’s going on in your life. It enables you to get in touch with your feelings and gain insight into many aspects of your life.

Someone who keeps a dream journal has a natural AAR every day. What he or she needs to do, however, is to try to learn from experiences. It doesn’t just happen. To even have a chance to do that, he or she needs to start remembering and understanding their dreams.

The Dream Recovery System Deluxe Dream Journal Kit has everything you need to begin understanding the picture language your subconscious communicates with. Sometimes your conscious mind and subconscious mind aren’t in accordance. Your conscious mind is vulnerable to a litany of “you shoulds” from society and, other times, is captive to what appears to be rational.

The heart, however, wants what it wants. Adventure. Security. Whatever it comes up with.

Reconciling and acknowledging the disparities between the subconscious and conscious mind is part of mindfulness.

That’s what makes dream journaling so powerful. It’s an easy way to know yourself. When you know yourself, it’s easier to help yourself.

If you can’t lower the cost of tuition at the School of Hard Knocks, you can at least increase the value the experiences by getting every single drop of value from them. Remember, the best way to do that is to think of the five questions: